An airline has apologized to a 21-year-old woman for threatening to offload her from a flight for wearing “inappropriate” attire.

Emily O’Connor, who was traveling on a Thomas Cook Airlines flight from the UK’s Birmingham Airport to Tenerife in the Canary Islands on March 2, said the cabin crew told her that her clothing was “causing offense.” Her outfit consisted of a crop top and high-waisted pants.

“Flying from Birmingham to Tenerife, Thomas Cook told me that they were going to remove me from the flight if I didn’t ‘cover up’ as I was ‘causing offence’ and was ‘inappropriate,'” she wrote on Twitter. “They had four flight staff around me to get my luggage to take me off the plane.”

She said she had worn the outfit through the airport and was only told to cover up upon entering the plane by the cabin crew.

O’Connor said she stood up to ask fellow passengers whether they were offended by her outfit, and received no response.

She said the flight manager, along with four other staff, then told her to put on a jacket or be removed from the plane. “The manager then went to get my bag to remove me from the flight,” she wrote on Twitter.
O’Connor was given a jacket by her cousin, who was seated at the front of the plane, and was not watched until she had physically put it on, she said.

“In common with most airlines we have an appropriate attire policy. This applies equally to men and women of all ages without discrimination. Our crews have the difficult task of implementing that policy and don’t always get it right,” the airline added.

The airline’s clothing policy stipulates that customers wearing “inappropriate attire (including items with offensive slogans or images) will not be permitted to travel unless a change of clothes is possible.” It also states that passengers must wear footwear while on the aircraft.